Link: https://consortiumnews.com/2020/03/19/the-mutilated-world-is-moved-by-the-nurses-and-doctors/
By Vijay Prashad
March 19, 2020
By Vijay Prashad
March 19, 2020
SARS-Co-2 or COVID-19 moves swiftly across the planet, leaving no
region untouched. It is a powerful virus, with a long enough incubation period
to hide the symptoms and therefore to gather more and more people in its deadly
arms.
Slowly, the world is shutting down, fear is overtaking us. But fear
is not an option. The virus is deadly, but it is not the virus alone that
engenders fear. Much of the world is afraid because people realise that we live
in institutional deserts, that our elected leaders are mostly incompetent, and
that the profit motive has focused so much of human potential on money rather
than on humanity. The deep loneliness that has fallen like a shroud on the
world comes from that realisation as much as from the enforced social
isolation. A majority of the world’s heads of governments rely upon fear to
bewilder their populations; they thrive on panics of one kind or another. They
simply do not have the moral fibre to lead us as this pandemic rushes through
our lives.
In an unlikely place, the Financial Times, the Africa editor
David Pilling writes of the catastrophe occasioned by the
shift from public health to private health. There is, he writes, ‘the
temptation to view health through a personal lens’, as non-communicable
diseases such as cancer, hypertension, and diabetes eclipse other ailments; the
antidote to these ailments has been seen as personal (a fitness regimen) and
private (expensive medical insurance). As private medical colleges, private
hospitals, and private pharmaceutical companies have ballooned, the public
system has withered. This development, Pilling notes, ‘ignores two facts. One
is that the most effective health interventions, from clean water to
antibiotics and vaccines, have all been collective. The second is that
infectious diseases have not been defeated. They have, at best, been kept at
bay’. There is no substitute, as this catastrophe unfolds, to transfer
priorities from privatisation to the creation of a robust public sector at the
very least for health. Even in the most threadbare health systems, cannibalised
by austerity, it is the nurses and doctors, the ambulance paramedics and the
janitors, who have been heroic in their work; doctors and nurses are being
called back from retirement, working now long hours with no time to rest. They
are working beyond exhaustion to stem the tide against the virus. In this
mutilated world, those who hold us together by the bonds of love and fellowship
are our heroes, marvellous people who are willing to put themselves in harm’s
way to protect their fellow humans. Care givers – whether in families or in
institutions – never get sufficient credit for the enormous burden they have
shouldered as politicians have gutted the State and society. I would prefer a
planet of nurses rather than a planet of bankers. News from Italy is startling,
but it is a prelude of what might happen if the virus fully enters the favelas and bastis
of the world. It is little known that the Spanish flu of 1918-1919 had its
worst impact in Western India; of those millions who died in that pandemic, 60
percent were from this part of India, and those who died were weakened already
by malnutrition enforced by British colonial policy. Today, the hungry live in
these belts of slums that thus far have not been dramatically hit by the virus.
If death begins to stalk those areas, where medical care has been severely
depleted, the numbers of those who will die shall be startling, the wretchedness of the class
structure evident in the mortuary. Humans have for centuries confronted with
great sorrow little understood cataclysmic death, plagues and cholera being the
most notable. When the catastrophes strike, it is often women – as nurses, as
mothers, and as sisters – who have held society together. Mysterious and
mystical explanations have abounded. Science has helped us break through the
deep fatalism that has bewildered people; now we seek explanations in the
sequencing of genes and in the creation of vaccines. It is belief in reason,
science, and solidarity that sent Chinese doctors and nurses to the ends of
their country, such as into the Altai Mountains, to heal people and to contain
this very dangerous virus that has engulfed us in anxiety and death; it is this
that sent them, along with Cuban doctors, to Iran, Iraq, and Italy to assist
countries in distress. Their arrival reminds us of a century-long history of
socialist doctors and nurses who have thrown themselves into international
solidarity for the sake of humanity. These are people who share an ethical
landscape with the Indian communist doctors and their people’s polyclinics that
we wrote about in Dossier no. 25 (February 2020).
This is
the socialist tradition. And then there is the imperialist tradition. As
COVID-19 spreads, and as Iran was struck hard, a humanitarian response from the
United States would have been to end all murderous sanctions and let Iran
import medical equipment and supplies. The same applies to Venezuela, where
COVID-19 has now begun its march. Paola Estrada of the International People’s
Assembly and I spoke to the Venezuelan Foreign Minister
Jorge Arreaza, who told us that his country is facing ‘difficulties for the
timely acquisition of medicines’. But Venezuela, like Iran, has been assisted
by the Chinese, the Cubans, and the World Health Organisation. They are
resolved to break the embargo of imperialism and to break the chain of viral
transmission. ‘Sanctions are a crime’, they say in Venezuela. The US unilateral
sanctions take on a special criminal significance in the midst of this
pandemic. Equally criminal is that the siege of Gaza (Palestine) continues,
with two million people trapped by the Israeli blockade in a deeply congested
area. The Palestinian nurses, doctors, and medical support staff, as well as
the teachers and social workers who have, for decades, held together their
fragile society do not get as much credit for keeping Palestinian society alive
and resilient. One of them was Razan al-Najjar, a twenty-one-year old medic who
was nursing unarmed protestors in the Great March of Return; they were being
shot at by Israeli snipers. One sniper aimed his rifle at her and deliberately murdered her on 1 June 2018.
There are thousands of nurses, doctors, and medical workers like Razan
al-Najjar who are working hard to maintain the collapsing society in Yemen,
where – due to the Saudi/Emirati war – more than half of the population lacks the
very basic healthcare and nutrition. Imagine what the scourge of COVID-19 will
do in Gaza and in Yemen? That blockade, this war must end. The World Health
Organisation has been working hard, despite insignificant funding, to stave off
the spread of the virus. If you are able to donate some money, please do so to
WHO’s Solidarity Response Fund. Stand up to defend
this mutilated world by helping the caregivers whose labour is the salve to see
us through to the other side of this ruin.
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